Daily Dispatch

IMF sounds alarm bell on SA rising debt

Stern warning on bloated wage bill

- By SUNITA MENON — BDLive

TIME is slipping away for SA if public sector debt continues to spiral, the IMF has warned. Public debt as a share of GDP doubled in the past decade, reaching 53% in 2017, which has pushed up public sector financing needs.

Spending pressures and a higher public sector wage bill could raise financing costs and stunt economic growth further, said the IMF in a statement on Tuesday.

After an IMF team met key stakeholde­rs in the public and private sectors in the past week, the fund suggested the government implement realistic expenditur­e ceilings or add a debt ceiling to the fiscal framework.

“Public debt has risen, depleting buffers and leaving little room for fiscal policy to support growth,” said the IMF.

In the past fiscal year, the fiscal deficit was more than one percentage point of GDP above the budget target, as revenues underperfo­rmed, affected by low growth, and expenditur­e was pushed up by bail-out costs for state-owned firms.

While the Treasury’s return to fiscal consolidat­ion in the 2018 budget is a move in the right direction, the IMF stressed that with current growth projection­s, debt is still expected to rise in the medium-term.

Last week, the government signed a three-year multi-term public service wage agreement which exceeded the 2018 medium-term expenditur­e framework by R30-billion.

“Currently the public sector wage agreement is higher than what we bargained for and this is all because government wants to avoid a strike,” said Nazmeera Moola, co-head of fixed income at Investec Asset Management.

Moola said if the government could not curb wage increases, it needs to consider cutting jobs in the public sector. “We need a mechanism so that government understand­s the strain on the fiscal framework,” she said.

Earlier in 2018, the IMF revised its economic growth forecast upwards with expectatio­ns of 1.5% growth in 2018 and 1.7% in 2019.

While the growth projection­s are higher, these levels of growth will do little to decrease unemployme­nt, poverty and inequality unless there is greater policy and regulatory certainty.

Last week, SA’s economy saw the largest quarterly fall since the second quarter of 2009, indicating that renewed business and consumer confidence following the election of President Cyril Ramaphosa has not translated into the real economy.

The economy has not breached the 2% mark since 2013.

The weak economic growth will put a strain on the 2018 growth targets outlined in February’s budget speech and could result in the Treasury’s fiscal targets being missed, said Citadel chief economist Maarten Ackerman.

“Missing these targets would then place SA at increased risk again of further credit rating downgrades.”

The biggest boost to GDP was 1.8% growth in general government services on the back of increased public sector employment, which does not bode well for SA’s fiscal targets or the government’s ability to address the bloated wage bill, said Ackerman.

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? GROWING ECONOMIC FEARS: Managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde, centre, at a meeting with German businessme­n. The IMF has warned that time is slipping away for South Africa if public sector debt continues to spiral out...
Picture: GETTY IMAGES GROWING ECONOMIC FEARS: Managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde, centre, at a meeting with German businessme­n. The IMF has warned that time is slipping away for South Africa if public sector debt continues to spiral out...

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